Duties of a Law Abiding Citizen

Duties of a Law Abiding Citizen

H annah A rendt Eichmann in Jerusalem A Report on the Banality oj Evil PENGUIN TWENTIETH-CENTURY CLASSICS EICHMANN IN JERUSALEM Hannah Arendt was bom in Hanover, Germany, in 1906. She stud- ied at the Universities of Marburg and Freiburg and received her doctorate in philosophy at the University of Heidelberg, where she studied under Karl Jaspers. In 1933 she fled from Germany and went to France, where she worked for the immigration of Jewish refugee children into Palestine. In 1941 she went to the United States and became an American Citizen ten years later. She was a research director of the Conference on Jewish Relations, chief editor of Schocken Books, executive director of Jewish Cultural Reconstruction in New York City, a visiting pro- fessor at several universities, including California, Princeton, Columbia, and Chicago and university professor at the graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research. She was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1952 and won the annual Arts and Letters Grant of the National Institut? of Arts and Letters in 1954. Hannah Arendt’s books include The Origins ofTotalitarianism, Crisis in the Republic, Men in Dark Times, Between Past and Future: Eight Excercizes in Political Thought, and Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil. She also edited two volumes of Karl Jasper’sThe Great Philosophers. Hannah Arendt died in December 1975. To request Great Books Foundation Discussion Guides by mail (while supplies last), please call (800) 778-6425 or E-mail [email protected]. To access Great Books Foundation Discussion Guides online, visit our Web site at www.penguinputnam.com or the fo'undation Web site at www.greatbooks.org. HANNAH ARENDT Eichmann in Jerusalem A R eport on the B anality of E vil R e v i s e d a n d E n l a r g e d E d i t i o n PENGUIN BOOKS PENGUIN BOOKS Published by the Penguin Group Penguin Books USA Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, U.S.A. Penguin Books Ltd, 27 Wrights Lane, London W8 5TZ, England Penguin Books Australia Ltd, Ringwood, Victoria, Australia Penguin Books Canada Ltd, 10 Alcom Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4V 3B2 Penguin Books (N.Z.) Ltd, 182-190 WairauRoad, Auckland 10, New Zealand Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England First published in the United States of America by The Viking Press 1963 Revised and enlarged edition published 1965 Published in Viking Compass edition 1965 Published in Penguin Books. 1977 This edition published in Penguin Books 1994 18 20 19 17 Copyright © Hannah Arendt, 1963, 1964 Copyright renewed Lotte Köhler, 1991, 1992 All rights reserved The contents of the original edition of this book, in slightly abbreviated and otherwise slightly different form, originally appeared as a series of articles in The New Yorker. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING IN PUBLICATION DATA Arendt, Hannah. Eichmann in Jerusalem. Bibliography: p. 299. Includes index. ISBN 0 14 01.8765 0 l._ Eichmann, Adolf, 1906-1962. 2. Jews in Euiope—Persecutions. I. Title. [DD247.E5A7] 1976 364.1'38'0924 76-54831 Printed in the United States of America Set in Times Roman Except in the United States of America; this book is sold subject to the condi­ tion that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of bind- ing or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condi­ tion including this condition being imposed on the subsequent puichaser. Note to the Reader This is a revised and enlarged edition of the book which first appeared in May, 1963.1 covered the Eichmann trial at Jerusalem in 1961 for The New Yorker, where this account, slightly abbreviated, was originally published in February and March, 1963. The book was written in the summer and fall of 1962, and finished in November of that year during my stay as a Fellow of the Center for Advanced Studies at Wesleyan University. The revisions for this edition concern about a dozen technical errors, none of which has any bearing on the analysis or argument of the original text. The factual record of the period in question has not yet been established in all its details, and there are certain matters on which an informed guess will probably never be superseded by completely reliable information. Thus the total number of Jewish victims of the Final Solution is a guess— between four and a half and six million—that has never been verified, and the same is true of the totals for each of the countries conceraed. Some new material, especially on Holland, came to light after the publication of this book, but none of it was impor­ tant for the event as a whole. Most of the additions are also of a technical nature, clarifying a particular point, introducing new facts, or, in some instances, quotations from different sources. These new gources have been added to the Bibliography and are discussed in the new PostScript, which deals with the controversy that followed the original publi­ cation. Apart from the PostScript, the only non-technical addition concems the German anti-Hitler conspiracy of July 20, 1944, which I had mentioned only incidpntally in the original Version. The character of the book as a whole is completely unaltered. Thanks are due to Richard and Clara Winston for their help in preparing the text of the PostScript for this edition. H a n n a h A r e n d t June, 1964 O Germany — Hearing the speeches that ring from your house, one laughs. But whoever sees you, reaches for his knife . —B e r t o l t B r e c h t Contents Note to the Reader V i: The House of Justice 3 ii : The Accused 21 m : An Expert on the Jewish Question 36 iv : The First Solution: Expulsion 56 v : The Second Solution: Concentration 68 v i: The Final Solution: Killing 83 v ii: The Wannsee Conference, or Pontius Pilate 112 v m : Duties of a Law-Abiding Citizen 135 ix : Deportations from the Reich—Germany, Austria, and the Protectorate 151 x : Deportations from Western Europe— France, Belgium, Holland, Denmark, Italy 162 x i: Deportations from the Balkans— Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Greece, Rumania 181 x n : Deportations from Central Europe— Hungary and Slovakia 194 x m : The Killing Centers in the East 206 xi v: Evidence and Witnesses 220 x v: Judgment, Appeal, and Execution 234 Epilogue 253 PostScript 280 Bibliography 299 Index 304 EICHMANN IN JERUSALEM I:The House of Justice “Beth. Hamishpath ”—the House of Justice: these words shouted by the court usher at the top of his voice make us jump to our feet as they announce the arrival of the three judges, who, bare- headed, in black robes, walk into the courtroom from a side entrance to take their seats on the highest tier of the raised plat- form. Their long table, soon to be covered with innumerable books and more than fifteen hundred documents, is flanked at each end by the court stenographers. Directly below the judges are the translators, whose services are needed for direct ex- changes between the defendant or his counsel and the court; otherwise, the German-speaking accused party, like almost everyone eise in the audience, follows the Hebrew proceedings through the simultaneous radio transmission, which is excellent in French, bearable in English, and sheer comedy, frequently in- comprehensible, in German. (In view of the scrupulous fairness of all technical arrangements for the trial, it is among the minor mysteries of the new State of Israel that, with its high percentage of German-bom people, it was unable to find an adequate trans- lator into the only language the accused and his counsel could understand. For the old prejudice against German Jews, once very pronounced in Israel, is no longer strong enough to account for it. Remains as explication the even older and still very power- ful “Vitamin P,” as the Israelis call protection in government circles and the bureaucracy.) One tier below the translators, fac- ing each other and hence with their profiles turned to the audience, we see the glass booth of the accused and the witness box. Finally, on the bottom tier, with their backs to the audience, are the prosecutor with his staff of four assistant attorneys, and the counsel for the defense, who during the first weeks is accompanied by an assistant. 4 Eichmann in Jerusalem At no time is there anything theatrical in the conduct of the judges. Their walk is unstudied, their sober and intense attention, visibly stiffening under the impact of grief as they listen to the tales of suffering, is natural; their impatience with the prose- cutor’s attempt to drag out these hearings forever is spontaneous and refreshing, their attitude to the defense perhaps a shade over-polite, as though they had always in mind that “Dr. Serva­ tius stood almost alone in this strenuous battle, in an unfamiliar environment,” their manner toward the accused always beyond reproach. They are so obviously three good and honest men that one is not surprised that none of them yields to the greatest temptation to playact in this setting—that of pretending that they, all three bom and educated in Germany, must wait for the Hebrew translation. Moshe Landau, the presiding judge, hardly ever withholds his answer until the translator has done his work, and he frequently interferes in the translation, correcting and improving, evidently grateful for this bit of distraction from an otherwise grim business.

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